Pubdate: Wed, 13 Jan 2002 Source: Santa Fe New Mexican (NM) Copyright: 2002 The Santa Fe New Mexican Contact: http://www.sfnewmexican.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/695 Author: Tom Sharpe Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/spirit.htm (Spiritual or Sacramental) INDIANS FIGHT PEYOTE, HALLUCINOGENIC TEA COMPARISON Three branches of the Native American Church object to a Santa Fe-based group comparing its use of a hallucinogenic tea with the church's use of peyote. In an amicus curiae or friend-of-the-court brief filed earlier this month, the Native American Church of Oklahoma, the Native American Church of North America and the Native American Church of the Kiowa Tribe opposed the group's assertion that it should be treated the same as the church in being allowed to use a controlled substance. O Centro Espirita Beneficiente Unaio Do Vegetal, or UDV, wants to stop the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency from confiscating a tea called hoasca. Hoasca, made from two Amazonian plants, contains N.N. dimethyltryptamine or DMT, a controlled substance. UDV President Jeffrey Bronfman sued the federal government after the DEA and other law-enforcement agencies seized 30 gallons of tea from his office in Santa Fe in 1999. No charges were filed. Last fall, U.S. District Judge James Parker heard a week and a half of testimony on UDV's motion for a preliminary injunction. Parker has yet to issue a ruling. UDV says it has the same right to use the tea as the Native American Church does to use the psychedelic cactus peyote. The churches' friend-of-the-court brief was written by C. Bryant Rogers and David Gomez of the Roth, VanAmberg, Rogers, Ortiz, Fairbanks & Yepa firm of Santa Fe. Gomez, a native of Taos Pueblo, is the acting chairman of the New Mexico Democratic Party. "It is not a fair comparison," Rogers said in an interview Thursday. "They have to establish their rights on their own merits." UDV attorney John Boyd said Friday that the three chapters do not represent all Native American Church members. "It's really regrettable that these particular Native American Church organizations feel that the only way to protect their exemption is to make sure that no other religion gets a similar exemption," Boyd said. Rogers and Gomez wrote that their clients take no position on the merits of UDV's claims based on the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. But they argued that comparing UDV's rights with those of the church is "badly distorting and misrepresenting to this Court the nature, legal history and status of the Native American Church." "This is but the most recent in a long line of efforts by various individuals or religious groups to make such an Equal Protection challenge." Last year, UDV rejected a proposal for a friendly brief from the Santo Daime Church of the Holy Light of the Queen in Ashland, Ore., which uses a DMT-based tea called ayahuasca. UDV supported Santo Daime's legal analysis but opposed its participation in the development of an evidentiary record. Rogers and Gomez wrote that UDV incorrectly argues that the Native American Church is multiethnic, Christian and not restricted to American Indians. Other courts have held that the church is limited to American Indian members of federally recognized tribes, they wrote. Rogers said non-Indians occasionally participate in Native American Church rites, but courts have not exempted them from laws prohibiting peyote, although the Utah Supreme Court late last week agreed to hear arguments on whether non-Indians may use peyote in religious ceremonies. He said the U.S. Justice Department is seeking to amend its regulations to include only members of Indian tribes in its exemptions. Boyd and Nancy Hollander of the Freedman, Boyd, Daniels, Hollander, Goldberg & Cline firm in Albuquerque plan to file a response to the brief's arguments by Monday. But Boyd said Friday that the three Native American Church chapters are ignoring reality in denying the history of non-Indian participation in peyote rites and raising a false concern that the church's exemption for peyote might be abridged if UDV wins its case. "I think because of the difficult history that native people have had with our government over the past two centuries, their view is, somehow, some way, 'We're going to get screwed in this,' " Boyd said. "You can't blame them." Rogers and Gomez's brief says denying UDV the right to use hoasca will not deprive its members of their Constitutional rights. "We're basically saying the flaw in your argument is you're not similarly situated," Rogers said. "The bottom line is that there's a different history and political-legal status for the Native American Church as compared to any other non-Indian religion." Want to use this article? Click here for options! Copyright 2002 Santa Fe New Mexican Reader Opinions: Name: elsbieta Date: Jan, 21 2002 The Native American Church representatives, Gomez and C.Bryant Rogers, should study the ancient Native American history of sacred ayahuasca use by their Southern kin before condemning seekers to purgatory. They will benefit by not perpetrating attrocities and by studying before they react. Besides, there is no such thing as Indian and non-Indian, only people in pain, suffering from different degrees of alienation from the Mystery and the non-human world. Peyote and Ayahuasca, used carefully and with respect, help us to remember the mystery and to live in harmony with each other. Name: Chononita Date: Jan, 19 2002 I find the three Native American Church's legal brief preposterous and extremely weak: The UDV is a religion/practice, which uses a tea of sacred plants (B.caapi and P. viridis) as "medicine" (read sacrament) derived from long standing (thousands of years) and very cohesive Native American heritage just like the like the Native American. Likewise, the Native American Church is a religion/practice derived from long standing Native American traditions. A little historical perspective is in order here: The Native Americans dwelling in the U.S.A. were introduced to Peyote only about 150 years ago by Kwana Parker, who brought this revolutionary religion back from Mexico. It turned out to be such a unifying, healing, positive spiritual vector that it was adopted by many who were on reservations. Now, UDV was likewise introduced to the Brazilian population by one man, who learned the practice from Native Americans tribal people. I the last decade or so it spread to The U.S.A. and Europe, where it was eagerly adopted by many many people who find it oppressive to live in a spiritual vacuum. Another parallel is that both "Ayahuasca" and "Peyote" are psychoactive in that they provide direct experience of the spirit world. Which of course is a hard concept to grasp for most of the people who have no experience whatsoever of that reality and who are so steeped in our modern materialist culture that they intellectually reject spiritual growth and development and embrace materialism. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh